THK Mi;K: OMAHA. SATIKDAV, MAY 1, 1M.". The New United States National Bank Building is a Credit to Omaha r BAHKIHG EIPRESSHIO G1YEN FROM IHSIDE i New Home of the United State National Bank Express's Soli darity in E-ery DeUil. MUCH "EVERLASTING METAL" No finer banking house exists than the new building completed by the Vnlted State National bank with a frontage of Ho feet on Fa mam and aeventy-aix feet on Sixteenth atreet. 3t waa opened formally by a recep tion laat night. Concrete, cement, granite, marble, Ironse; and steel combine to produce a structure of massive strength and striking beauty. Consider the bronze, the "everlast ing metal." in the building. The main entrance is through two sets of very heavy bronze doors and en trance to the main banking room ia through one set of massive bronze doors. Th grill work of the taller' cares, nam plate ami limp pedestals outside the building- and the doors and grill work of the savings department are all of this natal. Tavernell Clair marble, brought trom Italy, Is used exclusively in the. mala tanking room. The fourteen massive pll ' lara and the bank counters are of this marble, while the wails and counter In the saving department are of white Ver mont marble. flollattr ( Straetar. . Pome Idea of th strength and solidity of the building may be gained from these fignres of materials used: Three thou sand barrels of cement, 2,900 tons of sand, 3,300 tons of crush stone, 600 tons of Iron snd steel, four carloads of Mains granite, twenty carloads of Indiana limestone, Itt.OOO common brick made in Omaha, 15.. 000 Btroud's white sand lime brick for facing and 90,000 square feet fireproof til ing. The foundation walls, fbrty-two Inches thick, are laid thirty feet under ground a nd are of reinforced concrete. . Beauty, elegance, richness, splendor ar apparent everywhere on ths Interior. The lobby of th main banking room la of Tennessee marble laid In tiles. Ths rest of the room H covered with a composi tion cork of mosaic design. Caen atone, imported from Francs, Is used on the walls of the main room, toned to blend with the marble. On the south side of the main lobby is a public watting room, president's pri vate office and larg consultation room, besides a. larga roomy space for offi cers- desks. This part of the bank is finished in old Kagiish oak and ths fur. nitur is peotallT designed to mstch. The east and worth sMrs r finished In qusrter-awrd whit oak stslal to match th thr. Old KaSll.h Uk. Th walls of the directors' room an raneled In Imported old Cntllsh oak. beautifully hsnd-csrved. The table In this room Is fourteen feet long and four feet wkle, made from a carefully se leoted log la rder to have a perfectly matched top. Ths pedestals are hsnd carved out of solid plee of wood. Fourteen chairs are carved to match the table and ar loather-uphorstered. Three check Vs in th main lobby ar notable, being carved ut of solid blocks of marble. Tops are of French plat alas, three-quarters of an Inoh thick, surmounted by handsome brona elertroliers. Thsrs ar three solid marbl settee, carved In th same design and upholstered in leather.. ruraitirr used throughout th working snaoe was especially Assigned for great est banking efficiency. I.l.ht FMstares Harsattals. Artificial Illumination ts all by Indirect lighting and the lighting fixtures were specially designed to harmonti with th architecture. Two hundred of th latest Improved flush switch with many, special con trolling devloes wsr used to meet the requirements of th bank. There ar thirty special electric butters with two tlcll annunoiators aad avral uniqu speaking tub arrangements, besUet thirty-Six telephones. . Th bank I equipped with two electric levators, tx sides two stairway Th skylight which floods the building with light run nearly the entire length Of th building nnd Is deelgned or beau tiful art metal K I sen, rich In color. In wtrrnr the building three utiles of steel conduit tubes nnd over eight mile made by VMor H. fn Id well of rubber-covered wire and cable were ! the bank sd. j "The harmony of design and color ami Rest Room for Wowten. " dignity of the proportions of ihe A rest room for women Is provided and .banking room are Ideal. To the architect aaf for holding th bank's cash, twelvw ate! chest for th bank's securities) and other valuable iawr. and I.Ottt safety deposit boxes for rentsj to the public. That the building meets the highest hopes snd Ideals of the hank officials it indicated by the following statement president of la beautifully furnished. In the men's part of the building a shower bath, fin ished In while tile, has been installed. A woaderful ventilating system .draws air from the outskio, through two sheets of water, thus removing dust and dirt and putting the proper amount of mois ture into It. In winter the sir will b heated by passing through heat colls regulated by thermostat. Foul air Is forced out of the building by fans. The wondeiful ault, than whlrh'ther I no mors up-to-date en anywhere In th world, has been described he for. Reinforced ooncrcte forms its body and It is lined with three layers of the most Impenetrable steel that sclenc has pro duced, each an inch in thickness. The first layer Is open hearth steel, the next I chrome steel, and the third of open hearth steel. All three at bolted and screwed together, making the vault absolutely burglar snd mob-proof. Ths door Is twenty-seven Inches thick snd eight feet In diameter. K.i.b.4 Safes Within. . The Interior of this vault contains, among other things, eight manganese alone Is du the entire credit for the huilillng, the bsnlilng room, and all the designing throughout the Interior. In cluding the general a. home of tone and decoration. llow wonderfully well he hue aucceedeil hus been confirmed to us on several occasion by distinguished vis itors who ar well known critics of arch Iteclute. It was Mr llenninter'a Idea that the Inside of the banking room should reflect the exterior In such a way that Whoever entered the hull, ling would leave with the one thotiKtit bank ing Impressed upon hla mind." HO GASH IN SIGHT FOR EXTENSIONS Missouri Facifio Officials Spend the Night in Omaha and Look Over the Belt Line. REMAIN IN THEIR PRIVATE CARS WHEAT AND CORN MOVE UP HALF A CENT IN OMAHA Reports of a heavy rtport demand for w1cat resulted In an advance of one-half cent per bushel on all kinds of grain ex cept oats, which were unchanged to one fourth up. Omaha receipts were: Wheat, thirty-one csrs: com, fifty: osts, thirteen, th prices rsnglng around $1.65 to II. M for wheat: 72 to 7 rants for coi n, and $0 to 82Vi cents for osts, A party of Missouri t'aciflc railway officials, most of them from head Quarters at St. Louis and headed by Alexander Robinson, recently ap pointed first vice president, on a train made up of private cars, arrived In Omaha shortly 'after 8 o'clock Thursday night and remained until 7 o'clock yesterday morning, when, leaving the Webster street station, they went south, continuing their tuur of Inspection of the lines of the system. The Missouri Pacific officials went over the Crete and Auburn branches and to St. Joseph. Enroute to Omaha Thursday night, they spent some time in South Omaha and along the Belt Line. Reluming, they made another Inspection of the Belt Line, and at TUIaton slopped long enough to go over the yards. That the Missouri Pacific doe not In tend to do much In the way of undertak InR new work this year Is apparent from the assertion of Vice President tlnhertlnn, -ho contends that the last fiscal year closed with the rosd having but $74,00 put easy In the surplus. !"sld Vic President Kobe rt son: j Money f r Kilrailsia , "It requires an expenditure of K.rtfO.OM to keep up our system and another W.SOO.- j W to meet obligation, so that yo i can oee that with hut M.OlO in the ai'rplua fund for the yrsr there la Utile hops of carrying on very much new work or make extensions.". As to the viaducts that have been a rifle official preferred W remain oa their train, none of them coming up town dur ing the erenlng. They explained that the work of th day had been Very trying and that Ihey were tired and needed rest. Oldest Suit on the Court Records is Brought to a Close An Injunction secured twenty years asc forbidding the Prospect Hill Cemetery as sociation from using a strip of ground adjoining property at Thirty-second and Psrker streets for remetery purposes has just been dissolved by District .ludae B ars. Jen I -owe. first mayor of long talked of on the west aid of the CnD. Nathan Utevens and Martin It. city at points where the Kelt t.lne crosses the Omaha streets. Vice President Itob ertson asserted: "Work that has been started will b continued and completed, but nothing new will b undertaken until business la bet ter and w have more money In sight." Mr. Rnbartson places git the hlsmi for the poor business conditions upon hostile legislation, both state and national, con tending that as a result of such rtsla tten rats. both freight and passenger, hav been forced down to a point wh-re there Is no longer any net revenue n th conduct of a railroad. Although invited la th Hotel Fonte nells, th guests of Assistant Qwtwirat Freight Agent Malcolm, th Missouri Ps- rrultt were plaintiffs In the suit, which is th oldest case In the district mint in which proceedings are still pending Danger of pollution of wells In th neighborhood, which wss the origins! grounds for the Injunction, no longer ex ists, according to Judge Hears, because city water la now used exclusively there. For this reason the cemetery association won Its long-continued fight to extend lis burial grounds. Itecords show that this case - upled tiu. sttentlnn of the district curt In- I"'. s. ', 1900. '07. 'OR, '12, 'it and US. Kent room nulclc wUh B-e Want Ad can be reniedqtiirkly and cheaply by a ! ' lr tt.-pf !The Elevatori i I Kimball Bros. I In the New United States National Bank Building? INSTALLED BY The Execution of the Interior Painting and Finishing of the New U.S.BankBldg. Done By Henry Lehmann &Sons 130S Farnam Street Practical Painters and Decorators i ALL GALV. IIROBJ Copper Tin Work and Ventilation on the U S. Bank Bldg. done by. JORNSON SHEET METAL V0RICS 218 North IGlti atreet ii n ii i Structural Iron and Steel Work on the New U. S Bank Bldg. was Furnished by I i j Paxton & Vicrlmg Iron Works j Manufacturers of , Structural and Ornamental Iron and Steel 0.aw tniYfabrS. 17& St fr-U. P. Ry. C J. VTCRUXG, IW LC'JIS'VOLIXG, Sec& Tru. A. J. YIEJUT;G,,Vertv4.l!r. F. R. VHRUEG, Aii't Mgr OMAHA I i I Company I TT I .. Council Bluffs, Iowa. Tbss ar th automatic wask button slsva tor bow coaxing lnt general use. W hav last r. cwlvsd an ordsr (or tbr front th United States government oa Vox Pittsburgh. Fa., oa to Xfa-aworto, Xan., and on tr Atlanta, Oa. This Is ths safest aad most eoaomlcal type of slsvator tor oa ia modrat-ls bull dint-wooes away with, th xpns f Ji operator. They make all kinds of alarm. tors wad dumb waiter for all purposes. Send fo Information to ii lit jjrvwwgf aw watt avc leUVisfsJiaivsi ssj j Kimball Bros. ! I Company I Council Bluffs, Iowa. I (VanCourt Stone A I v I ! I I Office: Rom 5, 1505 Howard Street, OMAHA Furnished the Crushed Stone, Washed Sand, and Portland Cement , Used in This Building GENERAL CONTRACTOR Omaha St. Louis r '' - : '' :' ' ' '. ' '' New York. Chicago Houston Toronto' :- '':iMB ; ..Montreal :;.':-): - ' ..... i Salt Lake Gity ! ' W IKI If I i Of Course We Furnished THE GLASS for the New U. S. BANK BUILDING We Gladly Furnish Estimates Midland Glass & Paint Co. llth &nd Howard Streets, OMAHA i v . r 'y is i Lighting Fixtures in the U. S. National Bank Building were all furnished by Burgess Granden Company I ISll Howard St. National Roofing Company I (Incorporated) t-J sCnt l 44 Vlf UOO I Lumber & Wrecking III II f I Roofing I 5 . . . j Contractors ESTABLISllD IN 1878 j Gravel Roofing on TLii Building . Furnished by National Roofing Co. OMAHA, NEBRASKA Branch: Sioux City, Iowa I I I Wrecked Tkis Oli Buildiaf QUICK, CLEAN and RESPONSIBLE. ! 21st & Paul Streets j Bargains in practically new articles in "For Sale oolumn: read it. ! 1 1